After the Pantomime
By Susannah Donim
Chapter 6 - After the Panto
Nick puts what he has learned as a Pantomime Dame to good use.
After the Dick Whittington curtain fell for the last time our stage
crew had to strike the set so that the next show - the professional
panto - could move in. Meanwhile the cast had to change for the party
and then help with packing up the costumes and everything else into
Arthur's two largest vans. In my dressing room Polly helped me strip
and cleaned off my make-up, while I said a sad goodbye to my lingerie
and dresses. My costumes and wigs were much more elaborate than anyone
else's so Polly and I were the last to join in the packing. It was
more or less all done by the time we got out, and we just had to load
Sarah's dresses, wigs and make-up onto the second van.
The panto cast party was also the LADS Christmas do, which explained
why the ballroom of the town's second biggest hotel was packed with
people I didn't know. When we arrived, Tom, Josie and my parents were
standing up at the bar talking amongst themselves and looking a little
lost. I parted from the Whitmores with grateful thanks for everything
they had done, and led my guests to our table which was near the back.
My family were effusive with praise for the show and my performance in
particular.
"Frankly, I didn't know you had it in you," said my father.
"I can't believe how good you were at being a woman," said my mother.
"I don't usually like Pantomime Dames. They always seem grotesque
caricatures of women, but you got the tone just right. Your voice -
and your mannerisms! I know it was supposed to be a comic performance
- and you were very funny - but sometimes, if I closed my eyes, I could
almost see my mother up there."
She seemed wistful. Then she remembered, as I did, that Granny was an
old bat.
There was booze and a buffet. By now it felt like we in the cast were
all old friends but in reality I hadn't known a soul there six weeks
earlier. So the conversation at our table was mostly family stuff
while all around us people were talking about the show, and comparing
it with past triumphs.
Eventually, when everyone had eaten their fill and there were more
empty bottles than full ones remaining, the LADS Chairman called for
silence and announced the annual awards ceremony. Last year's winners,
ineligible this year, presented the prizes to their successors. They
started with the minor prizes, at least from the point of view of us
actors. First up was Set Design; someone I didn't know won for
Camelot. Then came Best Stage Manager. I guessed ours was out of the
running following the curtain fiasco, even though it was hardly his
fault. Polly was a popular winner of the prize for costumes. She'd
done the wardrobe for three of this year's five productions, but the
committee particularly singled out her work on the panto. In her
little speech she kindly acknowledged the contribution of
MyOwnCouture.com and recommended all the ladies check out our website.
Introducing the acting awards the Chairman explained that, in the
spirit of the times, they'd done away with distinctions between actors
and actresses, and were now giving just three prizes for 'Best
Performance in a Musical, Drama and Comedy'. But first, we were all
happy to see Millie get the prize for 'Best Newcomer'. She'd made a
superb Dick, playing a difficult straight role with charisma, slapping
her thighs heartily, and leaping around with great athleticism. She
also looked fantastic in tights, but I'm sure that had nothing to do
with it, despite four-fifths of the Committee being men.
'Best Performance in a Musical' went to the guy who played Arthur in
Camelot. The Drama prize went to Beatrice in the summer open air
production of Much Ado About Nothing.
As the Chairman announced the last award of the evening, my heart leapt
as I saw Polly wheeling Arthur up to the front.
"The award for the Best Comic Performance of 2018," the Chairman said,
pausing for dramatic - nay, melodramatic - effect, "goes to Nick
Rawlinson for Sarah the Cook in Dick Whittington."
That was a popular decision too, not least with my family and the cast
of the panto. I staggered to my feet and strode in as masculine a
manner as I could to the front to collect my prize. Arthur even
managed to crack a watery smile in the enthusiastic applause and the
glare of the flash photography.
We all parted at nearly two o'clock in the morning amid promises to
keep in touch. Polly also made me swear to audition for a part in the
Spring production, which would be one of Alan Ayckbourn's early plays.
* * *
Over lunch on Sunday I was expecting the third degree from my mother
about Ruth, but she was called away. This was unusual at this time of
year. It wasn't lambing season. In fact baby farm animals are rarely
born in December, but then not all veterinary emergencies are to do
with births. We all hoped it wasn't an outbreak of some hideous
agricultural disease.
So Dad and I were alone in a quiet corner of our local, with pints of
Old Badger ale and steak and kidney pies. We spent most of the meal
talking about our various business ventures, and whether Josie was
pregnant. I thought not, but he said he knew they were trying.
"What was your mother saying about you and Ruth?" he said casually over
coffee.
"No comment. I can neither confirm nor deny..."
"I wouldn't blame you. She's a cracking bit of stuff..."
"Da-a-a-d!"
"...but she's engaged to Eddy, isn't she?"
"It's complicated."
"Fine. Don't tell me."
"When I can, I will. I promise. Assuming there's something to tell."
"OK, I trust you." He sighed. "But your mother won't."
"I know. I'll steer clear until the situation is resolved... one way
or another."
* * *
There were still three weeks till Christmas. Ruth and Vicky worked
hard to upgrade the website software. We now had the extension that
animated the figure's face as well as her body. It scanned the
customer's photo (assuming she had uploaded one) and matched many fixed
points to corresponding ones on the template. So now when the figure
strutted down the catwalk she was smiling and laughing and making sexy
'come hither' expressions - all with the customer's own face. We
tested it first with Vicky and it worked beautifully. Then Ruth
embarrassed me by using the publicity photo of Sarah the Cook. It even
worked for her. It was positively grotesque, but it was undeniably
realistic.
The next big thing was MyOwnCouture.com's meeting with the Bank. This
was to be on the Friday of the week after the panto. On Monday Ruth
called the team together in the upstairs office to plan what we would
say. We would be allocated an hour and a half for the meeting. The
presentation was to take no more than forty minutes, leaving sufficient
time for questions.
"I'll open and talk about the concept - the website and the user
experience. I'll describe how the software works in general terms, but
we need to keep the details secret until we have appropriate Non-
Disclosure Agreements in place. Till then it's our Intellectual
Property and extremely valuable. That should take about a quarter of
an hour. Then I'll hand over to Eddy to run a demo of the website.
OK?"
"Do you know if any member of the Bank's team is female?" I said.
"Why?"
"Well, we could demonstrate the site by actually making a dress for
her."
"That's a great idea!" said Eddy. "Make them part of the demo. Pull
them in."
Ruth was nodding. Everyone seemed to like this plan.
"In fact, you might go further," I went on. "When you've finished the
design, you could send it from your laptop over the internet to the
machines in the cowshed. If Mike was there, he could pass the design
to the cutting machine, and then on to the fabricator. You could rig
up a webcam and show the dress actually being made. You could even
show him packaging it up to mail to her - all in real time, during the
presentation in their office, and while they're watching."
"That would be really impressive!" said Vicky.
"We'd need to ask the Bank lady for her measurements," Ruth said. "She
might be embarrassed..."
"Mike might need help," said Vicky, ignoring Ruth's objection. "I
suggest I stay behind just in case. There wouldn't be much for me to
do in the meeting anyway."
Mike hastened to agree. He looked pleased and relieved.
"It's a risky strategy," said Ruth. "What if something goes wrong?"
"Well there are various precautions you can take," I began. "I mean,
you can influence the woman's choice of dress during the demo, to stop
her doing anything too fancy. It would have to be a standard material
and colour. You won't be able to dye the cloth or print a pattern
within the hour, but Mike can hold up 'ones we prepared earlier' to the
camera, to show what you can do."
"That should work," said Eddy. "I guess the worst-case scenario would
be if the machines break down, but they're running smoothly at the
moment. We've done half a dozen dresses since Nick's panto costumes
with no problems at all. I say it's worth the risk."
"The point is to demonstrate the end-to-end process for real," I said,
"and that includes showing them why you need investment - because you
can't afford to automate everything; because you need new, better
machines; because you can't do the fancy stuff or work with exotic
materials. As long as they can clearly see the potential, it doesn't
matter much if something does go wrong. It just underlines the need
for new investment."
"What if they're all men?" said Vicky. "Can you check with them?"
"I can try," said Ruth. "If they are, I could ask one of them to bring
his wife's measurements along."
"That would probably the strangest request they're ever had at an
investment meeting," said Eddy.
Even Ruth laughed.
For the next hour we thrashed through the details of the presentation.
We changed the running order. Mo was asked to prepare a series of
screenshots from the website for Ruth to incorporate in her PowerPoint
presentation. Eddy and Mike had to do the same for the machine control
software, and also to take some photos of the machines working.
"You realise this will be a negotiation?" I said, as we were finishing
up. "They'll want a share of the business, and they'll probably want
to put one of their people on your Board."
"Who are our Board?" Vicky asked.
"Eddy and I own 40% of the company each," said Ruth, "and Nick owns
20%, so we're the Board. I'm the MD; Eddy's the Operations
Director..."
"I thought I was the Technical Director?" said Eddy.
"Well, OK, you're both," she said. "And Nick is the Finance Director."
"Really?" I said. "I didn't know that."
"Well you should have read the stuff that Will's been sending us.
We're a limited company now, and you are therefore responsible for one-
fifth of our debts if we go bankrupt."
"Shit! Maybe the Bank will buy me out."
"Maybe, but they're not going to give you a hundred grand, are they?
We're not worth that much yet. You'd be better off waiting till we're
a rip-roaring success."
"But it does mean that if you and Eddy fall out, I have the casting
vote," I said.
I really only said it for a laugh, but the black look on Ruth's face
was worth it anyway. Eddy chuckled quietly.
"Can I buy some shares?" asked Vicky, apparently oblivious to any
atmosphere that might or might not have developed.
Ruth smiled. "Your faith in us is much appreciated, babe, but we're
not planning a share issue at the present time. As to your question,
Nick: yes, we are aware that we're going into a negotiation. Eddy and
I have discussed what we'd be willing to accept."
"And we're willing to walk away if we have to," he added. "There are
other banks."
"Do you need Will to come along?"
"I don't think so this time," Ruth said. "This session is just to get
their agreement in principle. If they approve investment, there would
have to be a subsequent contract meeting. We'll definitely need him
then."
The meeting broke up and Eddy and Mike went back to the cowshed. Mo
and Vicky returned to their workstations to get on with preparing the
presentation.
"Thanks for your contributions, Nick," Ruth said. "Your ideas were
really good."
"Nice to be appreciated."
She gave me a quick glower for appearances' sake and vanished into her
office behind a closed door. Any further development of our personal
relationship would have to wait.
* * *
I went down to the Club that evening. I hadn't been there for over a
month because of the show.
"Hello, stranger," said Lee, emerging from his little office. "You
were really great in the panto. I was there on the Wednesday."
The Club was closed on Wednesday evenings, so that was presumably the
only night he could have gone.
"Hey, Lee. I was just wondering when the next Open Mic night will be."
"Oh, we don't have any during December - office parties and so on.
We'll start them up again in the New Year. Are you going to bring
Daisy Duquesne out again?"
"I don't think so. That was a one-off, but I have some new material
I'd like to try out - as myself."
"Sure, but lots of people keep asking about Daisy. That would be
really popular. I could put the word out."
"Well my new stuff is about my experience with the panto. I wondered
if I might do some of it in the guise of Sarah the Cook - without
costume or make-up, of course."
She was still somewhere inside me and occasionally clamoured to come
out.
"Aren't you afraid people will notice the resemblance to Daisy?"
"Well it hardly matters if Daisy never appears again, does it?"
* * *
Ruth didn't manage to find out anything about the Bank's negotiating
team, but when we were ushered into their conference room at ten
o'clock on Friday morning we were delighted to see that there was a
woman on their side of the table. She was middle-aged, very smart in a
frilly white blouse and a pin-striped skirt suit, and wore a friendly
smile. Ruth, Eddy and I exchanged glances. We would go for it!
"Good morning," boomed a dapper, silver-haired gentleman, clearly the
senior executive. "I'm Richard Latham, Director of the New Ventures
unit here. On my left is Margaret Villiers, my Deputy, and just so you
know, she'll be taking over from me around Easter so, if anything, you
have to impress her more than me."
He paused and smiled. She smiled. We all smiled.
"And on my right is Justin Sealey, our technical consultant. Justin,
would you like to help our guests set up?"
Eddy was carrying our best laptop and the consultant helped him connect
it up to a seventy-five-inch Ultra-HD monitor mounted on the end wall.
He then plugged in an ethernet cable and Eddy was able to confirm that
the laptop was connected to the internet. While they were doing this,
Ruth introduced the three of us, briefly describing our backgrounds and
qualifications. She called me her 'Financial Adviser'. Apparently, I
had been demoted from FD.
Ruth's presentation was very impressive, both in its content and her
delivery. She was clear and confident, giving just the right amount of
information of the fashion industry and the potential size of the
market to convince her audience of the potential for our services. She
then moved on to the 'user experience', which she illustrated with
screenshots from our website.
After a little less than fifteen minutes, she handed over to Eddy who
explained what the software did. With the aid of more screenshots,
from the cowshed control computers this time, he described our machines
and how we proposed to develop them further when we had the necessary
funding. He showed photographs of all our equipment and of the stores,
which were full of bolts of cloth and dyes. He and Mike had put in a
lot of work to tidy up and the cowshed had never looked better.
As far as I could tell the Bank team were giving us their full
attention and even enjoying the show. Justin was particularly
interested in Eddy's piece and interrupted a couple of times to ask
quite technical questions. Eddy trod carefully, answering in general
terms but blocking detailed enquiries with comments about 'our
proprietary software'. The consultant seemed a little frustrated but
Latham intervened. He obviously knew the score; we were protecting our
intellectual property until contracts and NDAs had been signed.
After finishing his slot, Eddy sat down and Ruth took over again.
"I'm delighted to say that we are already trading successfully. Our
first big order was for the Lavenden Amateur Dramatic Society's
pantomime..."
What? She hadn't told me she was going to talk about this!
"After an accident destroyed a number of their costumes, they asked us
to help replace them - at very short notice." She started showing
photographs of Sarah's outfits as they came off the fabricator. "We
made all the Dame's basic dresses - several different styles and
designs - in just under two weeks. Most of them were 'bespoke'; that
is, non-standard. After all, few modern women want to dress like a
Pantomime Dame."
Everyone smiled at that. Some men do though, I thought to myself, and
it appears I'm one of them.
"So we had to program those from scratch," Ruth continued, "but any new
design only takes our programming team an hour or so to encode. Each
of Sarah the Cook's dresses needed at least two different materials;
some required three. They are mostly in gaudy colours too, so we had
to do a lot of colour matching and dyeing. But our system can do that
efficiently too, so the only delay was in waiting for the material to
dry after the dyeing. I have some photos of the finished products
too..."
Pictures of Sarah - me - started appearing on the screen.
"Now, as you will see, the finished dresses are much more complicated,
with all sorts of frills and flounces. That one has a false bodice and
an apron. We're not set up to do any of that, so they were done by the
Society's seamstresses. We think there could be a good market in
theatrical costuming, and not just pantos, but historical plays too.
We're confident our software can cope, but we would new machines to
make all those accessories."
I was aware that Margaret was looking at me oddly. First she looked at
a close-up of Sarah, then me, then back at the screen. She caught my
eye and smiled.
"The Society order was worth ?2,000," Ruth was saying, "and we've had
seven further orders to date, with excellent feedback from our
customers. Our web designer has worked hard to optimise our Internet
footprint and there are clear signs that it's working, but obviously we
would do much better if we could increase our advertising budget.
We'll be leaving copies of our accounts with you, and Nick can give you
our full financial picture if you need more detail."
All of the panel were scribbling notes now.
"Finally, I imagine you would like to see a demonstration of our system
in action?"
The Bank team were nodding and smiling, so Ruth took the bull by the
horns.
Turning to the only woman on the panel, she smiled and said, "Margaret,
if we made you a dress, I hope you wouldn't think we were trying to
influence you unduly?"
"You can do that? What - here? Now?"
"We certainly can."
Eddy was at the laptop. She motioned to him to log in to our website.
"What you see on the screen now is exactly what a customer would see
when they go to our site. First she selects a type of dress from our
range of styles." Eddy clicked on the Style icon and the gallery
appeared. "We have eleven basic products, but can offer variations on
each, such as neckline, skirt length, shoulder straps, and sleeves. Do
you see anything you like?"
Margaret glanced at Richard. He smiled encouragingly. Justin was
grinning.
"Well I quite like that cocktail dress," she said diffidently. She was
pointing at the picture of the BodyCon dress, and studying the
accompanying blurb. "Probably in a 'medium' fitting. I don't think I
can get away with 'snug' anymore."
"Rubbish," said Latham gallantly.
Margaret laughed. "Do you have it in a dark blue?" she asked.
"Certainly," Ruth confirmed. "Let's make that for you, shall we? Now
we need two things: your measurements obviously, and a photograph.
You'll see why later."
Eddy had put up the form into which the customer was supposed to enter
their details.
"I'm not sure I can remember all those measurements."
"Well they're not all essential, but the more you can enter, the better
the fit will be. I do have a tape measure with me..."
"Oh I don't think I could..."
Latham interrupted. "I quite understand that Margaret might not want
to be measured up in front of four men, like a prize heifer," he said
with a smile. "However I was going to suggest we take a short coffee
break anyway. Why don't you two ladies go to the powder room and get
the measuring sorted out? I'd really like to see how this all works.
I'm intrigued."
I could have kissed him for that intervention. Well, I couldn't have
kissed him, but Sarah - or Daisy - could have. Margaret made no
further objections and she and Ruth left to go to the Ladies'. Knowing
his place, Justin took our coffee orders and went to the table at the
back of the room where refreshments had been laid out.
"I must admit, this is a breath of fresh air, compared to many of the
new venture proposals we have to wade through," said Richard,
conversationally. He accepted a cup of coffee and an oatcake biscuit
from Justin. "We have to refuse some because they're impractical;
others because they're too 'niche' and would struggle to find a market;
but yours passes both those tests. After all, your market is half the
human race!"
"That was Ruth's thinking," Eddy confirmed, "and if we can address the
'accessories gap', as she calls it, we can start doing really fancy
stuff like wedding dresses."
"I can see you're not quite as au fait with the jargon as your
partner," Latham said, good-naturedly.
Justin joined us, handing me and Eddy our coffees.
"I'd like to see your designs for the new machines that will do all
those fiddly bits," he said.
Obviously he was also unfamiliar with the unique language of the
fashion industry.
"I'll bring them with me next time we meet," Eddy confirmed, while
implying that the consultant wouldn't be seeing anything unless there
was a next time.
We had used up all our allotted time by now, but the Bank team showed
no signs of wanting to leave. Soon the ladies returned, chattering
like old friends. Ruth was very good at this, I thought admiringly.
She sat down at the laptop and started entering Margaret's
measurements.
"You boys don't need to look," she said sharply to us.
I didn't think Margaret had anything to be embarrassed about but we
dutifully turned our backs.
"With the customer's permission - GDPR and all that - we can encrypt
and store her measurements for her, so she only has to enter them once.
That should encourage repeat business. Now I just need to upload your
photo from my phone, and I'll show you what the customer would see
next."
Thirty seconds later, music started up on the monitor's powerful
speakers and a model with Margaret's face and figure sashayed
professionally down a catwalk in a beautiful dark blue cocktail dress.
It was covered in sparkling sequins and looked very much like my dress
when I was Ruth's Auntie Elsie, except that Margaret the model was
clearly much more beautiful and feminine.
Model Margaret looked over her shoulder and smiled at us. The real
Margaret gasped.
"The CGI's great, isn't it? We think this will be a real selling
point," Ruth said, quite unnecessarily, judging by the open mouths on
the panel. "The customer can see what she will actually look like in
the dress she's designed."
"It's even better than checking yourself out in the mirror," said
Margaret, "because you can see yourself from behind, and walking."
"So that's what you'd have looked like if you'd gone into modelling
rather than banking," said Richard, goggle-eyed.
"Oh hush," said Margaret, who was clearly loving this. "Can you really
make that dress?"
"Send it, Eddy," said Ruth. "You can bypass the payment form, can't
you?"
Eddy nodded and clicked the Send icon. The message came up saying,
'Sending design to Manufacturing'.
"He has now sent the encoded instructions to the cutting machine. Can
you log into the control terminal, Eddy?"
Eddy switched windows on the laptop. A much simpler page with a few
lines of typed instructions appeared on the conference room monitor. A
steady beeping started up.
"That beep will be heard by the operator in the workshop," Ruth
explained, "telling him that a new job has started up. As you can see,
the system gives him instructions on which cloth to load. When he's
ready, he hits Enter and the cutting machine starts up. Can you bring
up the webcam, Eddy?"
Eddy switched to another window and suddenly we could see a view inside
the cowshed and Mike clipping a roll of dark blue cloth into the
cutting machine. He stepped across to the control machine, pressed a
button, and the cutter started up. I noticed Vicky hovering nervously
in the background.
"If I remember rightly, this design requires two pieces of cloth to be
cut," Ruth said. "One for the bodice and one for the skirt."
The cutting machine finished and there was another beep.
"Now the operator has to carry the cut pieces across to the fabricator
and lay them on the platen in approximately the position specified by
the design code. The software knows the shapes of the different pieces
and how to align them properly on the fabrication bed for stitching
together. The machine won't start until its sensors confirm that the
pieces are in acceptable positions. Eventually we want to link the two
machines together so that a human operator won't be necessary."
After a couple of minutes the fabricator beeped. Mike appeared and
scooped up the completed dress. Vicky joined him in front of the
webcam and he held the dress up against her. They both smiled and
waved.
The Bank panel gaped, speechless.
"Well, I'm b..." said Margaret, and dried up.
"Exactly," said Richard. He turned to Ruth. "Can you do one for my
wife? I still haven't got her a Christmas present."
"I'll give you the website address," said Ruth with a smile, "and a
price list."
Latham laughed.
"Well, I think we've seen all we can take in today," he said. His
colleagues nodded. "I just have a couple of questions. First,
staffing. How many of you are there?"
"In addition to the three of us, there's Mike who helps Eddy and Vicky,
our programmer. You saw both of them on the webcam. We also have Mo,
our part-time web designer, and we retain Will Holford, as our legal
adviser."
She was clearly implying that I was a full-time employee, which was a
little disingenuous, to say the least, but this wasn't the time to
contradict her.
"Have you a growth strategy?" Ruth looked blank. "I mean, if the
business takes off as you hope, you'll need more staff, won't you?
Have you planned how you'll ramp up your numbers?"
"Not yet," she admitted.
"I understand," Latham said, kindly. "You might see it as putting the
cart before the horse, but I recommend you put a staffing plan in place
alongside your financial strategy. You won't be able to deliver the
latter without the former. We can help you with that anyway. If
nothing else, you need to get yourself a secretary. You're going to be
much too busy to do all the admin yourself."
There were a few more questions, which we answered by passing over
copies of our accounts and the monthly reports of website traffic Mo
had generated so far. Finally Richard summed up.
"Well, I think I speak for the panel when I say we're very keen to
proceed to the next stage. We'll get our standard pack off to you as
soon as we can - NDAs, investment conditions, and so on. If we can get
all the paperwork filled in before Christmas, we can get together again
to finalise contractual arrangements in the first week of the New
Year."
That will give Will Holford something to read over the Christmas break,
I thought.
"That would be wonderful!" said Ruth. "Margaret, would you like me to
send your new cocktail dress here to the Bank or to your home address?"
"Here will be fine, thank you, Ruth. I can wear it to our Christmas
party."
"Don't forget you'll need a slip with it. I should have mentioned, we
can't sew linings into our garments yet. That's something else we need
funding for."
"I'll remember."
Eddy disconnected the laptop and started packing up. We all got up to
leave. There were warm handshakes all round.
When we got outside the building Ruth astonished me by throwing her
arms around my neck and smothering me with kisses.
"What was that for?" I asked when I had got my breath back. "I didn't
do anything. I hardly needed to speak all morning."
"We wouldn't have even got here without you," she said, now a little
embarrassed by her emotional display.
"Plus you scratched her itch when she really needed it - three times,
wasn't it?" said Eddy, with a grin.
I didn't remember telling him that. So I wasn't the only one who'd
been counting.
* * *
MyOwnCouture.com had several more orders before Christmas. Some were
from people who had seen the name in the Dick Whittington programme,
and one - gratifyingly - from Richard Latham for a Christmas present
for his wife. They kept the team busy up till Christmas. Also Ruth
and I spent a couple of days at Will's office studying the Bank's
Investment Guide. They offered a number of options. All variations
insisted on a seat on the Board, but the number of shares the Bank
Director would be able to vote depended on the level of risk they
believed they were taking, and therefore on the form in which we took
their support. For example, for a simple advance of half a million,
they would require 20% of the shares, which Ruth didn't like. A more
attractive option was that they would just buy and lease us the new
machines we needed. For that they would only require 10%.
I also had to produce a five-year financial plan, which involved making
some optimistic and completely unfounded assumptions about growth.
Fortunately the Guide helped a lot there. Will sent off a list of
'clarification questions' in the last week before the Festive Season
shutdown, not expecting the answers till New Year.
On the Friday before Christmas Eve we invited all our venture teams up
to the Manor House for a festive drinks party. Those teams that hadn't
made their breakthroughs yet pumped Ruth and Eddy, Gerry and Steve,
with questions, and I was glad to see their morale shooting up. I
resolved to try and spend more time with all of them, even though that
would mean spending less with MyOwnCouture.com. The party was the
first time Ruth had seen the scale of what Dad and I were trying to do.
After I had introduced her to the others, she seemed a little subdued,
given the happiness of the occasion.
After the party everyone began disappearing for Christmas. Ruth went
back to her parents up in Manchester. I soon found myself missing her
company. Eddy was staying in the flat, presumably spending the season
with his many boyfriends. So he and Ruth would be apart from Christmas
Eve till the second of January. I wondered whether either set of
parents would find that odd.
The five of us had a brilliant Christmas at home, doing all the usual
stuff: eating and drinking too much, watching TV, and playing stupid
party games. We were glad to get out of the house on Boxing Day. We
went to the Club for a wine tasting party. We sat with Polly and
Arthur, who was now getting around with crutches, much to his wife's
relief. In addition to the house band, led by Frank, the entertainment
was provided by a young comedian who started at the Club's Open Mic
night and had just turned professional. Tom wasn't impressed.
"He can't tell a proper joke to save his life. This is all just being
rude about politicians and media people. Any fool can do that."
"You're better than him, Nick," said Josie, "and Daisy's much better."
"Who's Daisy?" asked my mother.
"Ah..." I said. I looked at Tom and Josie.
"Nothing good ever comes from keeping secrets from the people you love,
Nick," said Polly quietly.
I assumed she was talking about Mum and Dad, but she knew about me and
Ruth too, so...
"OK," I said, "Daisy is me. I did Open Mic night half a dozen times
this year, once as Daisy Duquesne. Josie helped me drag up."
"And bloody good she was too," said Lee, who had just come up behind me
and had obviously overheard the conversation.
He pulled up a chair and joined us, uninvited. Well it was his club, I
suppose.
"When we realised I could 'pass', we just thought my performance would
be more effective if no one knew Daisy was really a man. I wasn't
trying to keep secrets."
"It was seeing him as Daisy that convinced Charlie and Arthur that he
could play the Dame," said Polly.
"That explains a lot," said Dad.
"I'm still not convinced he can," grumbled Arthur. "He wasn't a proper
Dame."
But no one was listening.
"So who else knows about Daisy?" asked my mother.
"Just the people at this table, plus Charlie," I said. "Oh and Eddy,
and Frank over there." I didn't think it was worth mentioning Harry
and Mac.
"Not Ruth?"
"No."
"Oh, Nick!" My mother sounded disappointed in me.
"What? She's just my business partner. She's not part of my private
life." I saw Polly raise an eyebrow. "Well not properly. It's...
complicated."
"I like Ruth," said Josie.
Tom nodded. There was an awkward silence.
"Anyway, when are we going to see Daisy again?" asked Lee, who wasn't
privy to the cause of the general discomfiture. "It's been six weeks
and people are still asking after her."
"Yes, Nick, please!" said Josie. "It'll be such fun.
I had been looking forward to getting back to stand-up, but I had
intended to do it as Nick. Eventually they wore me down. I had to
promise that Daisy would be back on the first Open Mic night of the New
Year, on the second Friday in January.
"Can I borrow your high heels again, Arthur?"
Mum and Dad looked at me, then at Arthur. Polly laughed.
* * *
Josie insisted I spend one of the days between Christmas and the New
Year with her. Her plan was that she make me up as Daisy in the
morning, then we would go to the nearest large shopping centre for
lunch and buy a new outfit for me to perform in.
"What was the matter with what I wore last time?"
"Honestly!" she said, exasperated. "You're going to have to work
harder than that if you want to be a proper girl!"
"I never said I wanted..."
"No girl would wear the same outfit twice for performing in public.
Besides it wouldn't fit."
"What are you talking about? I may have put on a couple of pounds over
Christmas, but it won't make that much difference."
"But we're not talking about you, are we? Daisy will be two and a half
months more pregnant. Your bump will have to be noticeably bigger.
We're going to get you a maternity dress."
"Can't I just have an abortion?"
"Absolutely not! I'm against abortions, especially for men."
* * *
So I reported to Tom and Josie's place at nine o'clock in the morning
on the Friday after Christmas. I was soon up in their spare bedroom
again, stripping off. The bed was covered in the familiar items that
made up my Daisy disguise, plus a couple of new strange-looking
objects.
"I'm glad to see you've shaved your legs," Josie said when I was down
to my underpants. "That will give us more options."
"I didn't," I said. "I mean, Polly did it for Sarah's bedroom scene."
"Yes, I remember, but that was a week ago. Your stubble's getting
noticeable. I'll get my Ladyshave."
"Hang on! It's two weeks before my next appearance as Daisy."
"But by then your legs will be really hairy again, and shaving them
will be much harder. You should do it every couple of days between now
and the eleventh of January."
So I had to stand in the bath while she removed all the hair on my
legs. Unlike Polly she went all the way up to the seam of my briefs.
"Aren't you getting a little carried away?" I said. "A six-months-
pregnant lady doesn't wear miniskirts."
"You never know though. I'm just being thorough. I'll do your arms
and hands too, while I've got my razor out."
I'd learned there was no point in arguing with my sister-in-law. Come
to think of it, all the women in life seemed to be able to boss me
around - my mother, Ruth, even Polly. Was it me, or them?
"OK," said Josie, breaking into my unsettling thoughts, "how does that
feel?"
"Stings a bit."
"Well, I have some moisturising cream but you're supposed to wait for
half an hour before applying any lotion to newly shaved legs. I'll rub
some on then. We can start getting you dressed while we're waiting.
She led the way back into the bedroom.
"Here," she said, handing me a new grey spandex garment. "Take your
knickers off and put this on while I go and clean up the bathroom."
"What is it?" I said, examining it suspiciously.
"It's a maternity panty. Here - read the box."
She went back to the bathroom. I hurriedly dropped my briefs and
stepped into the strangely-shaped garment before she could get back and
catch me naked. She wouldn't give a fig of course, but Tom might not
understand. The panty was tight around my thighs but very baggy from
my groin upwards. No doubt Josie was going to pad it out to make me
look six months pregnant.
I heard the bath taps running, presumably as she washed my body hair
down the drain. I picked up the box the panty came in. The label
read, 'Seamless, breathable mesh Mid-Thigh PettiPant Maternity Shaper.
A Blend of Nylon and Spandex. Provides gentle support and a relaxing
comfortable fit. Perfect under dresses to prevent thigh chaffing.'
Josie came back. She glanced at me, sizing me up.
"Are you sure this is the right size?" I asked.
"I think so. You're a Large, which covers dress sizes 14-18."
"It seems awfully loose," I said, flapping the surplus material around
my waist.
"Well it won't be when we've filled it with padding, dummy."
She reached for the pack of upholstery foam and her scissors.
So began the padding process. She cut off strips of foam and I crammed
them into the panty, forcing them right down to surround my genitals.
From there we added more and more strips, gradually filling the panty
up to the top. Josie had to reach down inside to adjust the position
of the strips of foam and smooth them out. This became a little
intimate and she couldn't have failed to notice my growing erection -
again - but she just laughed it off with another flattering remark
about the Rawlinson family heirlooms.
By this time my butt was twice as big - almost as big as Sarah the
Cook's had been - and my waist had completely disappeared. The panty's
waistband - if you could call it that - was now half-way up my chest.
This was a strange feeling, as I was normally used to my waist being
approximately at navel level.
After a good half an hour of this effort, Josie called a halt.
"I think that works," she said. "I was concerned that the foam would
over-stretch the material and cause it to sag unnaturally, but that
spandex is very firm. We've padded it out evenly and the panty's
natural shape looks just like a baby bump at the front and a big round
bum at the back. It's good enough; pregnant women aren't all the same
shape, after all. Let's get your bra on next."
She helped me on with a new bra in the same style as the panty, and
began stuffing it with foam.
"This is a larger size than you wore last time as Daisy, because
women's breasts grow throughout pregnancy. You shouldn't have too much
trouble with this. It's not as big as the one you wore as Sarah.
Polly said that was 42D. I'm amazed you could move at all!"
"It was padded with a different kind of foam. It was much lighter than
this."
"Well, the extra weight in all those feminine places should force you
to move like a pregnant woman. At this stage of your pregnancy, you
would probably be getting pain in your back or pelvis, so even sitting
down and standing up can be tricky."
"May I remind you I'm not really pregnant?"
"Obviously, but you're trying to make people think you are, so you
should try to move like a pregnant woman. Slow and steady, and try to
keep your back straight. Are you going to perform standing up or
sitting down?"
"I hadn't thought about it. Anyway, it's called stand-up for a
reason."
"But it wouldn't be realistic for a six-months-pregnant woman to stand
up for ten minutes if she didn't have to."
"I suppose. I'll ask Lee to put a chair out for me. Obviously I won't
be able to use the mic stand."
"OK, and you should straddle the chair. Turn it around. Sit astride
it, keeping your arms arched and resting on the chair's back. Lean
forwards. That's how pregnant women are supposed to sit on hard-back
chairs."
"You've given this a lot of thought." A thought occurred suddenly.
"You must have done some research. Am I going to be an uncle?"
"I wish." She sighed. "No, Phoebe, one of my old school friends, has
just had a baby, and I helped her through the pregnancy as her mother
wasn't around. Little Evie is gorgeous. I'm the godmother." She
snapped out of it. "Come on. Let's get you dressed. I borrowed this
maternity top from Phoebe."
It was a black polka dot smock that came down to mid-thigh. It had
three-quarter sleeves and an elasticated waist which accentuated my
figure and showed off my baby bump. We paired it with grey skin-tight
trousers and black flats I borrowed from the LADS wardrobe. It was
around half-past ten by now, so we stopped for a break.
"Just your wig and make-up to do now, and maybe some jewellery," she
said, as we sat down in the kitchen with our coffee and chocolate
digestives. She grinned. "You realise you've worn make-up much more
often than I have over the last month? You should learn how to do your
own."
"Why? I won't need it ever again after Daisy's performance on the
eleventh."
"You sure about that?"
"Pretty sure. If I ever get invited to a fancy-dress party, I'll go as
a cowboy."
"Boring!" she said. "What about a Vicars and Tarts party? You'd make
a much better tart than vicar."
I laughed, thinking - not for the first time - how lucky my brother
was.
"Come on, Daisy," she said, "Let's get you finished. Here's your
handbag. We need to get to the shops."
"Why, by the way? Surely I'm dressed OK for the Club as I am? Why
should we spend any more money?"
"It's not about that," she said. "It's about you getting out and about
and comfortable as a six-months-pregnant lady so you can look natural
at the Club. We'll probably need to do it again next week for
practice. It won't hurt to get you some more things. Don't you want
to try a maternity dress on?"
I didn't answer, but she was right. I very much wanted to try a
maternity dress on.
* * *
Josie and I had a great afternoon lunching and shopping as sisters-in-
law. She only had to pull me up a couple of times for sitting with my
legs apart or taking too long strides.
"Mothercare next, I think," she said, as we repaired our lipstick in
the Ladies after lunch.
It was quite fun browsing, pretending to be looking at baby clothes and
nursery furniture. Then we found the maternity dresses, and Josie
persuaded me to try one on.
"Anything but those hideous dungarees," she said. "You'd look like a
fat labourer with a huge beer belly."
"Oh, thanks very much, sis!" I said, sarcastically, reaching for a
couple of dresses.
"You're a size 16, by the way; you might get into a 14."
"Got it."
I chose a sleeveless denim smock dress with floral embroidery, and a
smarter two-piece dress with a white lace bodice and blue pleated
skirt. The latter might even be a good choice for Daisy's stand-up
routine - or sit-down, I suppose I should call it now. I looked around
for the changing rooms and headed off.
"Don't forget, you've got three months to go," she called after me.
You're going to get a lot bigger yet! Don't get anything too tight."
"OK," I said, chuckling at the thought of my bump getting bigger.
"I'm just going outside to call Tom. Won't be long."
The assistant at the changing room asked if I needed any help;
obviously I declined politely in my best girly voice. I found an empty
cubicle, put my handbag on the seat and took my top off. I could try
both dresses on without removing my leggings. I was a little surprised
that I felt no anxiety about entering such an exclusively feminine
environment alone. Gradually during the day I had felt a Daisy persona
forming and taking charge, just as had previously happened with Sarah.
It hadn't worked that way with Auntie Elsie, presumably because I
hadn't been her for as long and I was terrified of exposure for most of
the time.
I tried the denim dress on first and stepped out of the cubicle area to
examine myself in the large mirrors. The assistant couldn't help but
try a little sales pitch.
"Good choice, madam," she said. "It's a sensible, practical dress,
just the thing for everyday wear."
I smiled and agreed, enjoying the fantasy. Daisy would probably have
bought it, if she had actually existed, I thought. I went back in and
changed into the second dress. This was much more romantic, the sort
of thing one would wear for a night out with the baby's father. I
didn't see Josie coming up behind and joining me at the mirrors. She
caught me posing in the second dress and twirling wistfully.
"That's really nice," she said. "You should definitely get that for
your show. It's much more attractive than your black top. How much is
it?"
I dropped my voice so that we wouldn't be overheard.
"I'm not actually going to buy anything, you idiot! I'm not pregnant,
or even a woman!"
I felt Daisy bridling at that inside me. Josie carried on as if I
hadn't spoken.
"Look, it's in the sale - it's only thirty pounds. How did the other
one fit?"
"It was fine," I hissed. "Now can we go?"
"I'll buy both of them for you," she said, with a twinkle in her eye,
and loudly enough for the assistant to hear. "Because you've been such
a good girl," she added, more quietly.
"Allow me, madam," said the assistant, seizing her opportunity and
blocking any further attempts by me to stop my sister-in-law buying me
two dresses. "Would you like to wear that one out? I can just take
the label to the till."
So with Mothercare carrier bags containing the denim dress and the
clothes I came in, Josie and I made our way back to her car. I had to
admit I loved the swirl of the pleated skirt around my legs. I was
also aware of attracting more attention than I had in my boring black
smock. Perhaps I would wear this dress to the Club. It would probably
be better with stockings and heels though...
"Well, that was a very successful shopping trip, I think," she said, as
I secured my seat belt over my bust and baby bump. "Don't you agree,
Daisy?"
"Yes, and thank you for the dresses."
"My pleasure. I think Daisy is coming along nicely. I only caught a
couple of people looking at you askance."
"What?"
"Yes, a couple of women in the cafeteria obviously clocked you. Didn't
you notice?"
"No! Christ, I would have died...!"
"Well they were sitting just a couple of feet away and were watching
you for a good half an hour."
"So what gave me away?"
"I don't know, but I'd guess your figure. If you look closely, and you
know what you're looking for, you can tell that your curves are just
padding. They don't move right. Female flesh jiggles and wobbles -
certainly on a woman of your dimensions."
"OK, that's it! I quit. I'll call Lee and cancel Daisy's spot. Nick
can go on instead."
"No, no, no! Not after all the trouble we've gone to. Nobody will
notice anything when you're only on view for ten minutes at the Club.
Your voice and mannerisms are near perfect now."
It took her most of the journey home to persuade me to reconsider, and
when we got back Tom joined in. They probably wouldn't have succeeded
if Daisy herself hadn't persuaded me. It seemed that she was a
determined, if imaginary, lady...
* * *
New Year came and went. Tom, Josie and I went up to London to see the
fireworks and party with old university friends in Notting Hill. We
had a great time with drinking games, strip poker, and casual sex.
Unusually for us no one got arrested; perhaps we were getting old.
I got back to the Manor House by late afternoon on the New Year's Day
and spent a couple of hours going through my emails. There were lots
of messages of congratulations for my performance in the panto from
LADS members and supporters, some of whom I knew, many I didn't. It
was gratifying but it also made me sad that it was all over and I would
never see Sarah in the mirror again. Charlie reiterated Polly's
invitation to audition for the Spring Ayckbourn.
More orders had come in at MyOwnCouture.com. They were well into
double figures now, not counting the Dame costumes for Dick
Whittington. Those hadn't been bought through the website, so I would
need to chase LADS for payment. I was trying to remember who the
Treasurer was. I knew I'd been told. Was it Roddy? I should also
prepare an income statement for December. The Bank would want to see
that at the next meeting.
Ruth asked us all be in early the next day as we'd need all hands to
the pumps to deal with the new orders and prepare for the contracts
meeting. I stopped to think. I never intended actually to work on any
of my ventures. Just hand over the money, monitor the spending, and
take my dividends as a major shareholder from those that succeeded,
while stomaching the losses from those that didn't. I even had dreams
of selling my shares and making my fortune if any of them turned out to
be the next Amazon or Apple. So how was this happening? How did I end
up being an unpaid finance manager, cum office administrator, cum
bloody secretary? I sighed. I knew perfectly well how it happened.
It was Ruth.
I dropped an email to Will to ask him what he thought of the Bank's
Investment Pack and check his availability. It occurred to me that
Ruth should have done that (or at least her secretary), but she had
been leaving all our dealings with Will to me. She probably felt
uncomfortable asking him for help, given that we weren't paying him -
yet. Which reminded me: I would need to put an allowance into the
business plan for legal fees.
There were more emails from the guys at my other business ventures. I
would probably need meetings with most of them this week or next to
review progress and go over accounts. MyOwnCouture.com and the
diabetic testing project were going well, and it looked like another
one to do with virtual reality headsets which didn't give anyone motion
sickness was taking off.
Another of my ventures was with university friends who had set up a
data analytics company specialising in town centre traffic information.
This was often hard to obtain as it came from 'official' sources, and
was invariably out of date by the time it was available. My guys
planned to fly drones over their customers' target areas taking very
large numbers of photographs over a period of days. This would enable
them to analyse traffic flows in and out of business parks, shopping
centres, distribution depots, storage facilities, factories, etc. From
that they could estimate sales, hiring, production and inventories
weeks before official numbers came out. My support had enabled them to
improve their drone fleet and cameras, and to beef up their number-
crunching computers. They were at last generating interest across a
range of retail and industrial businesses. We reckoned it would soon
be time to approach a bank for major funding.
Sadly I reckoned I would probably have to pull the plug on our venture
in fitness instruments which had gained virtually no traction in the
last three months. The 'Uber for Private Planes' idea wasn't looking
promising either. The owners of the planes were generally too rich to
worry about empty seats on their flights, and there weren't enough
potential customers looking for the said seats. Oh well, win some,
lose some.
Vicky and I arrived together at half-past eight the next morning to
find Ruth was already in the office. We exchanged greetings; enquired
how we all had enjoyed the holidays; and thanked each other for our
gifts. Then we got down to work.
It was a busy week. Ruth and Vicky processed the online orders that
had come in over the Christmas break and four new ones that had arrived
since. All of the orders involved mods of some kind. One woman wanted
a BodyCon dress with a higher neckline; another wanted an A-line with
spaghetti straps; and so on. The software had been designed to manage
that kind of mixing 'n' matching, so processing each order required no
manual intervention. Most of the effort went on colour-matching and
dyeing, and on printing the customers' sometimes esoteric choices of
pattern. Then it was just a matter of scheduling the dyeing and
printing with the cutting and fabricating. We all looked forward to
automating that.
Ruth was happy to hand over the management of the latest orders to
Vicky, Mike and Eddy. She wanted to spend some time encoding a new
offering: maternity dresses, which I thought was ironic, given the
circumstances. Perhaps I'd be able to buy Daisy's stuff from
MyOwnCouture.com in future. Wait! What was I thinking?
On the Wednesday Will dropped in to talk about the Bank's Investment
Pack and their draft contracts. We emailed some clarification
questions and made some counter-offers for the type of support we
wanted and the corresponding number of shares they could have.
On Friday morning their response came. There were no show-stoppers.
The contracts meeting was arranged for the last Wednesday of January.
That was fine for me. I would be able to concentrate on Daisy's second
appearance for the moment. I still had to put my material together and
memorise it.
I asked Ruth out to dinner (etc) on Friday. She said she would have
liked to, but couldn't afford to be seen out with any man except Eddy,
as she had explained. I gently suggested we just did the 'etc' at her
place. She said that she would have enjoyed a romantic dinner (etc),
but without the tender precursor she just wasn't that itchy at the
moment, so didn't need scratching. I briefly considered getting
dragged up again, perhaps as Auntie Elsie so as not to risk being
confused with either Nick or Daisy. That certainly seemed to get her
excited last time for some reason, but I decided the idea was
ridiculous, and hardly a good basis for a relationship. But did I want
a proper relationship? Did she?
This wasn't getting us anywhere. But then, was there anywhere to go?
I hoped it wouldn't be too long before Ruth and Eddy were independent
of the Deveres.
* * *
That weekend Tom was away on an agricultural college course, so I
agreed to go out with Josie again as Daisy. The extra practice
wouldn't hurt. She had borrowed another maternity dress for me from
her friend, Phoebe.
"You haven't told her anything about me, have you?" I asked as she
attended to my stubble with her Ladyshave.
"Only that I have a pregnant friend who is short of money. She was
glad to help. We just have to return everything when you're finished
with it. She wants another baby soon."
"Glutton for punishment, eh?" I couldn't imagine anyone deliberately
loading themselves down with the kind of weight I would be carrying.
"I'm surprised she wasn't more curious about me. I thought women liked
to club together over pregnancy, new babies, etc."
"Oh she was curious, but I told her you were on your own, separated
from the baby's father, and weren't feeling very sociable. She
understood."
"Clever - and true enough. I've certainly never had intercourse with a
man. Does that make this a virgin birth?"
"OK, enough blasphemy. Get your knickers on, Daisy."
She helped me into the maternity panties and bra, and adjusted the
padding. I felt the weight and adapted my stance to manage the
ungainliness of my six months pregnant figure. Josie passed me a
plain, dark blue ankle-length shift dress. It was sleeveless and I was
a little worried that it left my rather obviously male shoulders bare.
"This is a dress!"
"No shit, Sherlock."
"Won't I need...?"
She held out a pair of knee-high hold-ups.
"Thanks," I said.
I sat down on the bed and struggled to get them on. My enormous bum
and distended stomach kept getting in the way. Since I had the option
- as real pregnant women didn't - I should have put the socks on before
my massive padding.
"Now you'll need something on top of that," she said as I eventually
managed to slip my nyloned feet into my black flats.
She handed me a short white lacy cardigan.
"Just do up the top button. You'd never be able to fasten the rest
over your enormous tummy anyway."
"I'm not fat though," I said, primly. "I'm pregnant."
Josie chuckled. "Let me do your wig and make-up next. Then we can go
down the shops."
"OK, but I'm really not buying anything new for Daisy."
She had me stand in the doorway for a photograph. I suspended my
handbag over the crook of my arm.
"You look really demure like that," she said. "Just like a sweet
little old-fashioned pregnant housewife."
I tried to smile shyly.
"'Demure housewife' isn't really a suitable look for telling jokes on
Open Mic night though," I said.
"Oh, I don't know. It would certainly catch a few people by surprise
to hear some raw and vulgar stuff coming out of the mouth of a prim
little preggy lady."
I didn't really do 'raw and vulgar stuff' but it was worth thinking
about. Being a 'prim little preggy lady' might be a little
embarrassing, but surely I was past that now, having been Sarah and
Auntie Elsie in public? Not to mention naked except for padded ladies'
lingerie in front of Ruth...
* * *
Life went on as usual for the next week. I went to meetings with all
my other ventures. Gerry called to say that the bank funding was
confirmed. He was talking to two small engineering companies about
manufacturing. Meanwhile Steve had already lined up three hospital
trusts and two clinical commissioning groups who wanted to buy devices
as soon as they were available.
Orders were coming in steadily now at MyOwnCouture.com. Ruth had come
up with lots of new designs and Mo added them to the website. I still
dropped in to see Ruth whenever I could. I got the impression she
wouldn't have minded my company in the evenings but she still didn't
want to be seen out with me. I spent most of my leisure time honing my
- that is, Daisy's - act.
The big day arrived. Lee was happy to make his office available again
as I still didn't want to mix with the audience before or after my
performance. I didn't want anyone who knew Nick to make the
connection. Lee promised I would be on somewhere in the middle of the
evening, around ten o'clock.
Josie helped me get ready as usual. With some misgivings I had allowed
her to persuade me to wear my 'demure' outfit. She did my hair - that
is, my wig - slightly differently, to look more like a soccer mom. I
carried my handbag, which I had decided was an essential prop. She
dropped me by the Club's back entrance at half-past nine and came in
with me, bringing my suitcase with Nick's clothes. After giving me a
last-minute inspection, she went round to join Tom and Eddy in the
audience.
Lee came to fetch me at just after ten. He laughed heartily at my
outfit.
"Oh that's brilliant," he said. Way to stand out from the crowd! OK,
you're on next. Huge audience tonight. I don't know whether it's
because we haven't had an Open Mic night for six weeks, or because I
let everyone know you'd be on."
I laughed. "It can't be that. Daisy's only done one gig."
"Don't be too sure. Anyway there's a small group of your peers out
there - Mac and Harry and the rest. They're dying to see you as Daisy
again." I must have looked alarmed. "Don't worry, they're all sworn
to secrecy. They're good guys; they won't give you away. Come on,
now. Two minutes."
* * *
"Ladies and gentlemen," Lee announced, "back by popular demand, and
telling jokes for two..."
OK, Lee, that was quite cute.
"...please welcome - Miss Daisy Duquesne."
I took the mic from Lee, stepped out into the spotlight and smiled for
the audience. I did a little mock curtsey, as low as my padded figure
would allow. I heard some gasps of surprise and a few uncertain
laughs. A woman at Open Mic night was rare enough, but a pregnant
woman, and one dressed like a suburban housewife? With her handbag
over her arm, as if she were on the way to the hairdressers?
I wasn't a raconteur. In all my performances as Nick, Sarah or Daisy,
all I had done was roll out one-liners. I didn't - usually - do
observational humour. But there wasn't much point in pretending to be
a six-months-pregnant woman if I didn't talk about that...
"Thanks for having me back. My performance last time was described by
critics as 'electric' and by electricians as 'critical'. As you can
probably tell I'm quite a bit further up the spout than I was before.
It's on my mind quite a lot these days, so if you're a man, you might
want to look away now...
"It took me a while to get pregnant and it wasn't happening. My
husband has a sex manual but he's dyslexic. I was lying there and he
was looking for my vinegar."
OK, that was just silly, but the silly ones often break the ice.
"So I went to the doctor and asked 'Why aren't I getting pregnant?'
I'm doing all the right things: I'm not drinking; I'm taking my
vitamins; I'm sticking a pillow under my bottom. He said, 'Are you
having sexual intercourse on a regular basis?' and 'I said, well I
can't do everything'."
They were getting going now, hopefully thinking I may be funny as well
as funny-looking.
"For me, the weirdest stage of pregnancy was when people weren't sure
whether to congratulate me or buy me a gym membership. What's the
difference between a pregnant woman and a supermodel? Nothing--if the
pregnant woman's partner knows what's good for him. I'm not sure if
it's the pregnancy hormones that are making me a bitch, or if I have a
valid reason. If the baby can really hear everything from inside my
tummy, I'm pretty sure her first word is going to be 'Fuck!'"
That got my first belly laugh. I sighed inwardly. You can always rely
on bad language to get a laugh, especially when you look like a demure
little lady who wouldn't say boo to a waterfowl.
"I'm really not looking forward to the actual birth. They say that
when you are in the middle of labour it's like watching two very
inefficient removal men trying to get a very large sofa through a very
small doorway. Only in this case you can't say, 'bring it through the
French window'. My childbirth instructor says it's not pain I'll feel
during labour, but pressure. In the way that a tornado might be
referred to as an air current."
There was a continual undercurrent of laughter now. From what I could
tell, it was led by middle-aged women, and a few husbands - people for
whom these were not so much jokes as memories, painful but nostalgic.
"But I intend to have a natural childbirth. In the sense that it's
completely natural to take drugs to alleviate excruciating pain. My
husband asked when's the best time to get an epidural - it's
immediately after learning that your girlfriend is pregnant.
"What's the most common pregnancy craving? For men to be the ones who
get pregnant. And what would be different then? Maternity leave would
last for two years with full pay, and morning sickness would rank as
the nation's Number 1 health problem."
Closing stages now. They seemed to be enjoying themselves, laughing
and whooping.
"I just want to eat all the time. This morning I told my husband to
put the chocolate biscuits somewhere I couldn't reach them, so he put
them on the floor. God gave men a penis and a brain, but unfortunately
not enough blood supply to run both at the same time."
...I wrapped up and took my bow. Lee came on, clapping. I handed him
the microphone.
"Daisy Duquesne, ladies and gentlemen!" he called.
The applause got louder. I took another bow. I love this!
* * *
I hurried back to Lee's office before any of my adoring public could
catch me. I slumped in his desk chair and unpinned my wig. The sweat
was running down my forehead, streaking my make-up. I reached for my
handbag to get a tissue to dab my face. I bent down to get my shoes
off. Josie would be here in a moment to help me change.
I was rubbing my feet and trying to reach round my tummy to remove my
knee-highs, when the door swung open. I caught a quick glimpse of
Josie but she was quickly elbowed aside by another familiar figure.
"Daisy Duquesne, I presume?" said Ruth. "So that's why Charlie and
Arthur picked you to be their Dame! It all makes sense now."
She was furious.